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Development of a small cell lung cancer organoid model to study cellular interactions and survival after chemotherapy

Introduction: Small-cell-lung-cancer (SCLC) has the worst prognosis of all lung cancers because of a high incidence of relapse after therapy. While lung cancer is the second most common malignancy in the US, only about 10% of cases of lung cancer are SCLC, therefore, it is categorized as a rare and...

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Autores principales: Sen, Chandani, Koloff, Caroline R., Kundu, Souvik, Wilkinson, Dan C., Yang, Juliette M., Shia, David W., Meneses, Luisa K., Rickabaugh, Tammy M., Gomperts, Brigitte N.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10441219/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37608896
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphar.2023.1211026
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author Sen, Chandani
Koloff, Caroline R.
Kundu, Souvik
Wilkinson, Dan C.
Yang, Juliette M.
Shia, David W.
Meneses, Luisa K.
Rickabaugh, Tammy M.
Gomperts, Brigitte N.
author_facet Sen, Chandani
Koloff, Caroline R.
Kundu, Souvik
Wilkinson, Dan C.
Yang, Juliette M.
Shia, David W.
Meneses, Luisa K.
Rickabaugh, Tammy M.
Gomperts, Brigitte N.
author_sort Sen, Chandani
collection PubMed
description Introduction: Small-cell-lung-cancer (SCLC) has the worst prognosis of all lung cancers because of a high incidence of relapse after therapy. While lung cancer is the second most common malignancy in the US, only about 10% of cases of lung cancer are SCLC, therefore, it is categorized as a rare and recalcitrant disease. Therapeutic discovery for SCLC has been challenging and the existing pre-clinical models often fail to recapitulate actual tumor pathophysiology. To address this, we developed a bioengineered 3-dimensional (3D) SCLC co-culture organoid model as a phenotypic tool to study SCLC tumor kinetics and SCLC-fibroblast interactions after chemotherapy. Method: We used functionalized alginate microbeads as a scaffold to mimic lung alveolar architecture and co-cultured SCLC cell lines with primary adult lung fibroblasts (ALF). We found that SCLCs in the model proliferated extensively, invaded the microbead scaffold and formed tumors within just 7 days. We compared the bioengineered tumors with patient tumors and found them to recapitulate the pathology and immunophenotyping of the patient tumors. When treated with standard chemotherapy drugs, etoposide and cisplatin, we observed that some of the cells survived the chemotherapy and reformed the tumor in the organoid model. Result and Discussion: Co-culture of the SCLC cells with ALFs revealed that the fibroblasts play a key role in inducing faster and more robust SCLC cell regrowth in the model. This is likely due to a paracrine effect, as conditioned media from the same fibroblasts could also support this accelerated regrowth. This model can be used to study cell-cell interactions and the response to chemotherapy in SCLC and is also scalable and amenable to high throughput phenotypic or targeted drug screening to find new therapeutics for SCLC.
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spelling pubmed-104412192023-08-22 Development of a small cell lung cancer organoid model to study cellular interactions and survival after chemotherapy Sen, Chandani Koloff, Caroline R. Kundu, Souvik Wilkinson, Dan C. Yang, Juliette M. Shia, David W. Meneses, Luisa K. Rickabaugh, Tammy M. Gomperts, Brigitte N. Front Pharmacol Pharmacology Introduction: Small-cell-lung-cancer (SCLC) has the worst prognosis of all lung cancers because of a high incidence of relapse after therapy. While lung cancer is the second most common malignancy in the US, only about 10% of cases of lung cancer are SCLC, therefore, it is categorized as a rare and recalcitrant disease. Therapeutic discovery for SCLC has been challenging and the existing pre-clinical models often fail to recapitulate actual tumor pathophysiology. To address this, we developed a bioengineered 3-dimensional (3D) SCLC co-culture organoid model as a phenotypic tool to study SCLC tumor kinetics and SCLC-fibroblast interactions after chemotherapy. Method: We used functionalized alginate microbeads as a scaffold to mimic lung alveolar architecture and co-cultured SCLC cell lines with primary adult lung fibroblasts (ALF). We found that SCLCs in the model proliferated extensively, invaded the microbead scaffold and formed tumors within just 7 days. We compared the bioengineered tumors with patient tumors and found them to recapitulate the pathology and immunophenotyping of the patient tumors. When treated with standard chemotherapy drugs, etoposide and cisplatin, we observed that some of the cells survived the chemotherapy and reformed the tumor in the organoid model. Result and Discussion: Co-culture of the SCLC cells with ALFs revealed that the fibroblasts play a key role in inducing faster and more robust SCLC cell regrowth in the model. This is likely due to a paracrine effect, as conditioned media from the same fibroblasts could also support this accelerated regrowth. This model can be used to study cell-cell interactions and the response to chemotherapy in SCLC and is also scalable and amenable to high throughput phenotypic or targeted drug screening to find new therapeutics for SCLC. Frontiers Media S.A. 2023-08-07 /pmc/articles/PMC10441219/ /pubmed/37608896 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphar.2023.1211026 Text en Copyright © 2023 Sen, Koloff, Kundu, Wilkinson, Yang, Shia, Meneses, Rickabaugh and Gomperts. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Pharmacology
Sen, Chandani
Koloff, Caroline R.
Kundu, Souvik
Wilkinson, Dan C.
Yang, Juliette M.
Shia, David W.
Meneses, Luisa K.
Rickabaugh, Tammy M.
Gomperts, Brigitte N.
Development of a small cell lung cancer organoid model to study cellular interactions and survival after chemotherapy
title Development of a small cell lung cancer organoid model to study cellular interactions and survival after chemotherapy
title_full Development of a small cell lung cancer organoid model to study cellular interactions and survival after chemotherapy
title_fullStr Development of a small cell lung cancer organoid model to study cellular interactions and survival after chemotherapy
title_full_unstemmed Development of a small cell lung cancer organoid model to study cellular interactions and survival after chemotherapy
title_short Development of a small cell lung cancer organoid model to study cellular interactions and survival after chemotherapy
title_sort development of a small cell lung cancer organoid model to study cellular interactions and survival after chemotherapy
topic Pharmacology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10441219/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37608896
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphar.2023.1211026
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